The Manila Times

Ten feared dead in Chile forest fires

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SANTIAGO: Chilean firefighte­rs on Saturday were battling rapidly expanding wildfires that officials fear have claimed about 10 lives and are threatenin­g hundreds of homes, prompting the country’s president to declare a state of emergency.

About a dozen fires have been raging since Friday.

The blazes are concentrat­ed in the Vina del Mar and Valparaiso tourist regions, where they have ravaged thousands of hectares of forest, cloaked coastal cities in a dense fog of gray smoke and forced people to flee their homes.

“We have preliminar­y informatio­n that several people have died, about 10,” said Sofia Gonzales Cortes, state representa­tive for the central region of Valparaiso.

In the towns of Estrella and Navidad, southwest of the capital Santiago, the fires have burned nearly 30 homes, and forced evacuation­s near the surfing resort of Pichilemu.

“I’ve never seen anything like it,” 63-year-old Yvonne Guzman told Agence France-Presse (AFP). When the flames started to close in on her home in Quilpue, she fled with her elderly mother, only to find themselves trapped in traffic for hours.

“It’s very distressin­g, because we’ve evacuated the house but we can’t move forward. There are all these people trying to get out and who can’t move,” she said.

On Friday, Chilean President Gabriel Boric decreed “a state of emergency due to [the] catastroph­e, in order to have all the necessary resources” to fight the fires.

“All forces are deployed in the fight against the forest fires,” he said in a message on X, formerly Twitter.

About 7,000 hectares have already been burned in Valparaiso alone, said Chile’s national forest authority, which called the blazes “extreme.”

Images filmed by trapped motorists have gone viral online, showing mountains in flames at the end of the famous “Route 68,” a road used by thousands of tourists to get to the Pacific coast beaches.

On Friday, authoritie­s closed the road, which links Valparaiso to Santiago, as a huge mushroom cloud of smoke “reduced visibility.”

The fires are being driven by a summer heat wave and drought affecting the southern part of South America caused by the El Niño weather phenomenon, as scientists warn that a warming planet has increased the risk of natural disasters such as intense heat and fires.

As Chile and Colombia battle rising temperatur­es, the heat wave is also threatenin­g to sweep over Argentina, Paraguay and Brazil in the coming days.

 ?? AFP PHOTO ?? IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT Residents are evacuated from their homes during a fire in Viña del Mar, central Chile on Feb. 2, 2024.
AFP PHOTO IN THE HEAT OF THE NIGHT Residents are evacuated from their homes during a fire in Viña del Mar, central Chile on Feb. 2, 2024.

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